Black Beauty - Anna Sewell

(Perpustakaan Sri Jauhari) #1

have been trained by my father.”


“I wish all the boys had been trained like you,” said the governor.
While Harry was sponging off the mud from Hotspur's body and legs Dolly
came in, looking very full of something.


“Who lives at Fairstowe, Harry? Mother has got a letter from Fairstowe; she
seemed so glad, and ran upstairs to father with it.”


“Don't you know? Why, it is the name of Mrs. Fowler's place—mother's old
mistress, you know—the lady that father met last summer, who sent you and me
five shillings each.”


“Oh! Mrs. Fowler. Of course, I know all about her. I wonder what she is
writing to mother about.”


“Mother wrote to her last week,” said Harry; “you know she told father if ever
he gave up the cab work she would like to know. I wonder what she says; run in
and see, Dolly.”


Harry scrubbed away at Hotspur with a huish! huish! like any old hostler. In a
few minutes Dolly came dancing into the stable.


“Oh! Harry, there never was anything so beautiful; Mrs. Fowler says we are
all to go and live near her. There is a cottage now empty that will just suit us,
with a garden and a henhouse, and apple-trees, and everything! and her
coachman is going away in the spring, and then she will want father in his place;
and there are good families round, where you can get a place in the garden or the
stable, or as a page-boy; and there's a good school for me; and mother is
laughing and crying by turns, and father does look so happy!”


“That's uncommon jolly,” said Harry, “and just the right thing, I should say; it
will suit father and mother both; but I don't intend to be a page-boy with tight
clothes and rows of buttons. I'll be a groom or a gardener.”


It was quickly settled that as soon as Jerry was well enough they should
remove to the country, and that the cab and horses should be sold as soon as
possible.


This was heavy news for me, for I was not young now, and could not look for
any improvement in my condition. Since I left Birtwick I had never been so
happy as with my dear master Jerry; but three years of cab work, even under the
best conditions, will tell on one's strength, and I felt that I was not the horse that
I had been.


Grant said at once that he would take Hotspur, and there were men on the
stand who would have bought me; but Jerry said I should not go to cab work

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